bodied

[ US /ˈbɑdid/ ]
[ UK /bˈɒdɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. possessing or existing in bodily form
    what seemed corporal melted as breath into the wind
    an incarnate spirit
    `corporate' is an archaic term
  2. having a body or a body of a specified kind; often used in combination
    big-bodied
    strong-bodied

How To Use bodied In A Sentence

  • I had to join this long queue, that snaked around a couple of times, and as each person left, a disembodied voice said, ‘Cashier number seven, please!’
  • For example, it was embodied in a system of "informal economics". Critical Social Research
  • Why then do we long to embrace incorporeality and flee our embodied natures?
  • This old, and now rare traditional variety has deep, full-bodied apple aromas, which hold nothing back on a super juicy palate.
  • It consisted of delicately inlaying colored clays into white bodied pottery.
  • It's a striking image of traumatic birth from a monstrous, disembodied womb. Times, Sunday Times
  • Rudyard Kipling's Recessional, in exultant recognition of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, embodied the spirit of that nostalgic period. Responsible Nationhood
  • To reduce this effect I tend to use large bodied wagglers, which are more stable in the water and are not dragged out of position so easily.
  • Her illegitimate position has rendered her wraithlike and insubstantial, almost disembodied.
  • Disabled and able-bodied pupils got together for a dance and drama day.
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